Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 74-year-old man had walked out the back door of his Ashland home on Feb. 20, 2023. Timothy Metcalf. Metcalf had left behind his cellphone and wallet. The only thing missing from his home was a ...
The Daily Independent (also known as The Independent Weekend Edition and formerly known as The Independent from 2003 to 2015) is a morning newspaper covering the city of Ashland and surrounding areas of Boyd County, Kentucky. Previously published daily, the print schedule was reduced to five days a week (Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays ...
Ashland Cemetery Company is a historic cemetery located in Ashland, Kentucky in the United States. [1] History. Ashland Cemetery Company was founded in 1870 by Hugh ...
Ashland is home to two newspapers: The Independent and The Greater Ashland Beacon. The Daily Independent is a five-day morning daily newspaper which covers the city and the surrounding metropolitan area. In addition, it offers national, state and regional news/sports coverage via reprints of Associated Press and CNHI wire reports and columns ...
The Eaton Wildfire raked a path of destruction through Altadena, California, reducing homes to rubble, leveling local businesses and upending lives. Among the ashes, residents Brian McShea and ...
In 1953 a group of concerned citizens approached the Most Reverend William T. Malloy, Bishop of Covington, and asked for his help in creating a new hospital called Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital (OLBH). Construction started in 1952 on a 31-acre (13 ha) tract, 4 miles (6.4 km) from downtown Ashland, Ky.
Charlie Steen was born in 1919 in Caddo, Stephens County, Texas, the son of Charles A. and Rosalie Wilson Steen, and attended high school in Houston.As a teen Steen worked summers for a construction company that helped finance his education; this is the same company that his first stepfather Lisle had died working at. [2]
Samuel May House (Prestonsburg) – Home of former state senator and representative, Samuel May, built 1816; Shropshire House – Home of Confederate governor of Kentucky, George W. Johnson; built 1814; Thomas Edison House – Home of Thomas Edison from 1866 to 1867; built c. 1850s